Innovative Materials and Techniques for Sustainable Energy Solutions

TL;DR Summary
Researchers from Cambridge University are developing a cellulose film with passive daytime radiative cooling (PDRC) properties that can help cool buildings and cars without using air conditioning units or other active, power-intensive methods. The plant-based, two-layered material gets cooler when exposed to direct sunlight and can be treated to provide bright, iridescent colors and a variety of textures. The bi-layered film with PDRC properties was nearly 7F cooler than the surrounding air when placed under direct sunlight.
Topics:science#alternative-technology#cellulose-film#environment#global-warming#passive-cooling#pdrc
- Cellulose film could help cool cars and homes without electricity TechSpot
- Air humidity power advance could be boundless source of clean energy USA TODAY
- Revamping Energy Recovery: New Way To Efficiently Convert Waste Heat Into Electricity SciTechDaily
- Beating the heat: These plant-based iridescent films stay cool in the sun Ars Technica
- Weird Science: How researchers generated electricity out of thin air Firstpost
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
2 min
vs 3 min read
Condensed
84%
480 → 77 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on TechSpot